Improved detersive soap



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lie'tters-Patent No. 92,654, dated July 13, 1869;

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The Schedule referred. to these Letters Patent anid making part of the same.

To all whom it may oonoern Be it known that I, Gnonen SANGER, of "Beloit, Rock-county, in the State of Wisconsin, have invented certain'new and useful Improvements in the Composi-- tion and Manufacture of Detersive Soap; and I do hereby declare the following description to be sufiioient to enable any person skilled in the art or science to which it most nearly appertains, remarks and use my said invention or improvements, without further iii-- vention or experiment.

The nature of my invention and improvements consists in the composition and manufacture of an improved -detersive soap, substantially alter the following process,'to nit: Put into a. steam soap-kettle eight hundred pounds of tallow; add two barrels of alkaline lye, made of soda-ash or the like, at twelve percent, and start steam. -Keep boiling and adding the lye until it is thoroughly made into soap. Then add three peeks of salt, dissolved in water, as strong as you can make it in the pickle, and boil the whole for half an hour;

This will separate the soapfroin the spent lye: Stop' steam, and let stand for two hours. The soap will then rise to the top of the lye. I Then draw off the spent lye from the soap, and add two barrels of good lye, at fifteen per cent, tothe soap. Start steam; add six hundred pounds of resin in kettle, boiling and adding lye until, the resin is thoroughly made into soap.

Then add one bushel of salt dissolved in water, and boil for one and a hall hour, which will again separatethe soap from the spent lye; Then stop steam, and let stand for three hours.

Then draw the spent lye from the soap, and add three barrels of lye, at fifteen per cent. Start steam,

and keep boiling, and'adding lye until the soap is-so strong that it will take no more strength,

Then add one bushel of salt dissolved in water; boil for two hours, stop steam, and let stand lhr four hours. t

Then draw the-lye, and add one and a half barrel of water. Start steam, and keep boiling and adding water until it is well mixed, or, as it is called, in a settled state. Then stop steam, and let it stand over ni ht.

gin the morningdip into tubs, and add the ingredients below named, and continue stirring until cool, viz: three'huudred and fifteen pounds of sol-soda, seventy-fire pounds of wheat flour, eight pounds of ammonia, one gallon of alcohol, twenty-five pounds of whiting, and thirty pounds of palmroil.

What I claim as my invention and improvements, and desireto secure by Letters Patent, i's- The soap, consisting of the above-enumerated inigredients, in about the proportions set'forth, and pre-,

pared substantially in the manner herein described and specified. V GEORGE SANGER.

'Wituesses:

H. Palounson, R. F. Donavon. 

